The Mining the Moon DVD follows as the plans for mining the lunar surface are discussed. Who knows what is beneath the soil of the moon, since only the astronauts have walked on it? The outer space DVD Mining the Moon lets you envision permanent life on the moon if the right resources are found.

The Mining the Moon DVD reveals that when humankind returns to the Moon, this time the plan is to mine its surface for hidden resources. Elements like hydrogen and oxygen, trapped in the lunar soil, are the keys to a permanent colony and for future missions to Mars and beyond.

Buy the Mining the Moon DVD, and discover the hidden resources trapped within the surface.

I showed this DVD to my college class as a basis for informing them of atomic fusion energy research, its benefits and importance. In fact, this is the only DVD of its kind of which I'm aware. It makes a phenomenal case for exploring this energy alternative for the future of the USA, aptly summarizing the potential benefits, the importance of this technology in conjunction with other, vital, human exploration, and provides a basis for how one should view the relative importance of developing new technology, particularly for how it pertains to the human race as a whole. This contrasts so sharply with our government's naive and fatalistic approach of doing absolutely nothing meaningful to service either the 300+ million people in this country or the 8+ billion people in the world. Want to get into deep trouble? Then ignore the huge need for exploration of future energy to properly service the expanding population and do NOTHING to develop future untapped resources on the Moon or on the Earth. They're heading us intentionally toward their own version of the old movie "Soylent Green", a non-productive, ridiculously rationed (and strapped), arrested society! This film goes beyond such stupidity, alerting us to a practical and exciting possibility of how to potentially augment the quality of life and help human beings sharply focus on healthy expansion into space exploration for both practical as well as ideal purposes.